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A 43-year-old Chicago man is seeking release from an Illinois prison, repeating a claim that he has made for nine years, that he was set up by corrupt cops. NBC 5's Phil Rogers reports. (Published Thursday, Dec. 17, 2015)

A 43-year-old Chicago man is seeking release from an Illinois prison, repeating a claim that he has made for nine years, that he was set up by corrupt cops.

And as allies, he points to FBI agents, who brought a case against those some of those very officers three years ago.

Ben Baker argued at his 2006 trial that Sgt. Ronald Watts and members of a South Side tactical team framed him when he refused to pay a bribe to remain free. Six years later, Watts and a second officer, Khalatt Mohammed, faced federal charges for shaking down drug dealers in the very same neighborhood.

Chicago Man Says Officer's Convictions Prove He Was Set Up

A 43-year-old Chicago man is seeking release from an Illinois prison, repeating a claim that he has made for nine years, that he was set up by corrupt cops. NBC 5's Phil Rogers reports.

(Published Thursday, Dec. 17, 2015)

Watts' unit has previously been the subject of allegations of rampant corruption. Two police officers, Shannon Spalding and Daniel Echeverria, said they worked undercover on the investigation of the Watts team, and believed the corruption went far beyond the two who eventually faced charges. Spalding and Echeveria currently have their own lawsuit pending in Federal court, charging they were ostracized and punished for making the allegations.

Indeed, Tepfer, an attorney for The Exoneration Project, says documents he obtained from the FBI and the Independent Police Review Authority reveal longtime suspicions about the Watts crew, some predating Baker’s arrest.

“What the documents say is that Sgt. Watts was utilizing his crew, his tactical team, to help keep this criminal enterprise going,” says Tepfer. “And when people would not agree, like Ben Baker, to be complicit in this scheme, he was framing them for crimes they did not commit.”

Tepfer filed a petition this week in Cook County Circuit Court, seeking to have Baker’s conviction vacated. He said he believes, based on Watts and Mohammed’s convictions, that his client should be released immediately. But at the same time, he noted the other officers in the unit who never faced charges, even though FBI agents and fellow police officers suggested they were complicit in the wrongdoing.

“Everyone who has not been charged not only is still on the force, some have been promoted,” he said. “What Ben Baker testified to in 2006 now has been proven absolutely true.”

Baker’s sister said her brother had insisted from the beginning that he had been set up.